Why did teams shy from Manny Machado and Bryce Harper? They aren't baseball's best

In the end, Manny Machado got his record-breaking contract, and sometime soon — maybe by the All-Star break? — Bryce Harper will get his as well. For that you must give their respective agents, Dan Lozano and Scott Boras, their due: They are able to sell their clients as the best players in the game and thus worthy of the highest contracts in the game.

There is a reason, however, why neither Harper nor Machado will be playing this season where they wanted to, and it isn’t necessarily because of the luxury tax penalties. Plain and simple: Teams like the Yankees, Dodgers, Cubs and Red Sox didn’t think Harper and Machado were the best players in the game and thus worthy of record-breaking contracts – as the Rangers and Yankees gave Alex Rodriguez when (pre-steroids) he was regarded as the best player in the game in 2000 and 2009, or the Marlins gave Giancarlo Stanton in 2016, or the Angels gave Mike Trout in 2014.

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In an informal poll I took last week, a dozen scouts and baseball executives rated the best players in the game. Harper and Machado both came in behind Trout, the Red Sox’s Mookie Betts, the Rockies’ Nolan Arenado, the Indians’ Francisco Lindor and the Astros’ Jose Altuve. When it came to Harper, some said they would even rather have Aaron Judge over the long haul, while a couple of others said they would rather have Harper’s own Nationals’ teammate, Anthony Rendon, who, I’m told, will very likely soon be signing an extension with Washington once Harper officially signs elsewhere.

For the Padres, the 10 years/$300 million for Machado made sense for a lot of reasons, the most important being, with $40 million in revenue sharing coming into their coffers every year and a projected $100 million payroll for 2019 (before the signing), they can more than afford him. With one of the top rated player development systems in baseball, the Padres are a team on the come-up and were able to sell Machado on the idea they will be ready to contend possibly as soon as the second year of his contract. It may be, too, Padres GM A.J. Preller will try to expedite that process by dealing for a proven front line starting pitcher like the Indians’ Corey Kluber. He’s got the chips to get him.

Machado. (Charlie Riedel / AP)

On the other hand, if, as now appears likely, Harper winds up signing with the Phillies, that would not make sense for them. Well, other than (temporarily) satisfying their fans’ lust for a major free agent. That frenzy was fueled by their owner John Middleton’s foolish remark that he was prepared to spend “stupid money” this winter (to land a Harper or Machado).

For one thing, Harper clearly doesn’t want to go to Philadelphia. If he did, he’d have signed by now. For another, even if they sign Harper, the Phillies’ starting rotation is a far cry from those of the Nationals and Mets — and pitching is always the name of the game.

A rival NL East scout had this interesting observation about the Phillies’ pursuit of Harper: “I don’t understand why they would want to spend all that money on Harper when they could spend the same $34 million a year on short term deals for (Dallas) Keuchel and (Craig) Kimbrel. They’ve done a lot of good things this winter, getting (Jean) Segura for shortstop, stealing the best catcher in the game (J.T.) Realmuto from Miami, adding (Andrew) McCutchen in the outfield and (David) Robertson for the bullpen. What they don’t have is enough starting pitching and a closer. Harper’s not going to make them a winner.”

Harper. (Manuel Balce Ceneta / AP)

Another exec pointed out that tying up so much payroll in Harper might also preclude the Phillies from being players for Trout in two years if he chooses to opt out of his contract. “Trout’s the guy who should get the $400 million Boras said Harper was worth,” the exec said, “and for the Phillies, who are essentially his hometown team, he’d be worth every penny of that. But can a team – any team – afford to have some $70 million payroll tied up in just two players and still stay under the (luxury tax) threshold? I don’t see how if they want to be competitive, especially given the price of pitching.”

The Baseball Writers Association lost one of the truly good ones Thursday when Nick Cafardo of the Boston Globe died suddenly of an apparent embolism at the Red Sox’s spring headquarters in Fort Myers. There are not too many people about whom no one had ever said a bad word, but Nick was one of them. And it isn’t often someone is universally respected within their profession, but Nick was that, too. Boston is full of outstanding baseball scribes, but I’m sure Sox fans would agree: No one was more plugged in with the team than Nick. You wanted to know all the ins and outs of baseball, you had to read Nick’s Sunday baseball notes column. The guy lived and breathed baseball, so it was therefore not surprising that on the day he died, he was roaming the Red Sox camp in search of a quote, a tidbit, a rumor to be checked out, on what was supposed to be his day off. He died doing what he loved, in a place he loved, but he was only 62. We are all poorer for all the great baseball columns he never got to write.

Fenway. (Elise Amendola / AP)

Little by little, drip by drip, the free agents are coming off the board. One of the strangest signings was the Twins’ two-year/$21 million deal with handyman Marwin Gonzalez. Why? Even though Gonzalez can play multiple positions, the Twins have already spent $87 million this winter covering themselves at shortstop ($25.5M for Jorge Polanco), second base ($7.5 for Jonathan Schoop), first base ($4.8M for C.J. Cron), right field ($35 million to Max Kepler and DH ($14 million for Nelson Cruz. Their primary utilityman last year and one-time uber prospect, third baseman Miguel Sano, will finally stay healthy and reach his potential this year. Gonzalez is a nice player but he seems like an awfully expensive upgrade over the Twins’ utilityman last year, Ehire Adrianza. Meanwhile, we’re beginning to wonder if Adam Jones is going to get a job anywhere. He’s 33, coming off his worst season since 2008 and the Orioles, the only team he’s known, don’t seem to want him back after he vetoed two trading deadline deals last summer. His former manager Buck Showalter said: “I know Adam and if he doesn’t get what he thinks he’s worth, he might just stay home. He’s a pretty stubborn guy and he has a lot of pride.”